Literally the Best Thing Ever: Interior Design From the ’60s and ’70s

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The colors! The furnishings! The general feeling of being on a spaceship designed by the Lucky Charms leprechaun! It just really makes you wonder about the people who live in these spaces. Like, who IS this person who felt they needed large plastic broccolis sticking up from their floor? Imagine the outstanding way the owner of that rainbow-ceilinged room must have stroked their outstanding beard when they decided they needed an outstanding rainbow ceiling! Et cetera.

I spent most of class looking at Interiors and not making any actual art, but I think it was good research and brain food and life inspiration. At the end of the year, upon his retirement, my teacher let me keep the book, and I like looking at it now to fondly remember how lazy I was as a student but how I got a pretty good idea of who I wanted to be: someone who wouldn’t actually ever have the dedication to commit to such wonderful design schemes but who would definitely think of themselves as sort of interesting enough to maybe do so one day. Which makes me less Actual Interesting Person and more Jeff Goldblum at Creepy Paul Simon’s house in Annie Hall, but I’m totally OK with that too.

You’re not the only one ;) I mean, I’m 23 now, but I’ve been into 50s, 60s and 70s design since I was 13 or something. And I was an avid collector of 60s clothes in my teens. Oh yeah, I still love the 60s :)

URBEX IS THE BEST. and thank you for that link, those photos are gorgeous. I agree that sometimes when I see photos of old buildings it makes me sad. even though they’re beautiful as they are, they were clearly really nice places before they were abandoned too.

you also have to think, though, that if people stayed in them and kept maintaining them, they probably would have unwittingly renovated & redecorated some of the best parts away. abandoned buildings, on the other hand, stay as they were left. they’re like architectural time capsules.

if you’re into real time capsules, though, you gotta check out japanese urbex (haikyo). it’s mindblowing. japanese buildings are usually concrete, so they don’t rot like wood buildings, and when japanese buildings are abandoned, the owners leave everything behind. seriously.

That site is so cool! How do people get into those places???
I agree, there is something very melancholy about it. Most of these buildings get stripped, demolished or horribly refurbished. I wish they could be restored!

huh? where did the rest of my comment go?
oh well it was meant to say:
i recently got a book on sixties style from the school library which features LOADS of cool interior design…it’s probably due back now, so thanks for reminding me.

I love old furniture layouts and designs! The color pallets and paint schemes are so inspirational!

I just want to lay on my lip shaped couch with a cocktail on a plastic hand coffee table under an original Andy Warhol of myself he gave me as a birthday gift. I just picked up Aladdin Sane by David Bowie and, in the middle of Lady Grinning Soul, I get a call from Liza to come right over to Studio 54. I say I simply couldn’t handle it tonight and start to try on the purchases I made at Big Biba!

OH MY GOD Tavi are you reading my mind??
This is like, an ongoing joke between my mom and I. Like seriously.
We were looking at apartments in NYC and there was this one that was like stepping back into the 70’s. There was a waterfall-wall thing, a huge blue couch that was designed in like a wave form, something that appeared to be an altar made of tupperware and a HUGE round portal lined with mirrors that led to the kitchen. It was like being insane.

(Also, the bathroom mirror frame was made out of hundreds of pink feathers, but that was actually kind of neat)

I found a 60’s interior design book at a yard sale once and I skipped off with a huge smile on my face because I’d never had the chance to explore an entire book dedicated to this stuff. I’d just watch “That 70’s Show” or “A Clockwork Orange” over and over to look at all the funky sets and vintage couches. Glad to know I have yet another shared interest with you, Rookie<3